By Phil Galewitz October 28,
2019
Under
pressure from the Republican-controlled Pennsylvania legislature to require
Medicaid recipients to work as a condition for coverage, state health officials
have devised a gentler approach to getting beneficiaries into jobs.
Starting
early next year, the Pennsylvania Medicaid agency under Democratic Gov. Tom
Wolf will ask people when they enroll if they want job training assistance. It
will then require its private Medicaid managed-care organizations to connect
those who want help to local employment specialists and follow up to make sure they
got it.
Teresa
Miller, the state human services secretary, predicts the strategy will get
better results than strict work requirements. The Trump administration has approved requiring work in nine
states, with requests from nine others pending. Arkansas is the only
state to implement the requirements, and more than 18,000 enrollees there lost
coverage from June 2018 to March 2019 — with little sign many found jobs.
Since
then, a federal judge struck down the work
requirements in Arkansas, Kentucky and New Hampshire. The Trump administration
and the states are appealing the decision.
“I
worry that, with its reporting rules, work requirements result in fewer people
covered by Medicaid, and that is not our goal,” Miller said. “Our goal is to
try to get people out of poverty. If you take access to health care away for
people not working, I’m not sure how that helps people get a job.”
A
handful of states are offering alternatives to get more enrollees into jobs to
lift them out of poverty and off Medicaid, the federal-state health program for
low-income residents.
In
Montana, about 32,000 of the 95,000 adult enrollees who gained coverage when
the state expanded Medicaid in 2016 have received employment services from the
state, including 4,200 who received one-on-one employment training services.
In
August, Louisiana began a pilot program to train Medicaid
enrollees for jobs such as a nursing assistant, commercial driver and forklift
operator. It expects 50 people to complete the training this year at a
community college.
More
states are expected to follow. “While currently only a small number of states
are starting to more directly connect Medicaid with the workforce training
systems, this is a trend that will soon expand to many more states,” said Steve
Bella, a Bend, Ore., health and workplace consultant.
Bobbi
Stammers, 37, enrolled in Montana’s Medicaid in 2017 and said the state’s job
training assistance helped her get a nursing degree this year. The program paid
thousands of dollars for her education expenses and supplies, including for
textbooks and lab fees, and even covered the cost of fixing her car.
Two
months after getting her degree, Stammers has a job with full benefits as a
registered nurse, which means her family no longer needs Medicaid.
“I am
so thankful I did this program; it really helped me get through school,” said
Stammers, of Charlo, Mont.
She
used student loans to pay tuition, but with her husband working as a
self-employed truck driver, Stammers said, additional expenses were burdensome.
“This program eased the way for sure,” Stammers said.
Conservatives
nationwide have pushed for work requirements since Medicaid expanded
dramatically under the Affordable Care Act. That law allows states to use
federal funds to provide coverage to all adults with incomes below 138% of the
federal poverty level, or $17,230 for an individual. Before that, many states
limited adult enrollment to pregnant women, parents and people with extremely
low incomes.
Despite
the focus on getting Medicaid enrollees into jobs, studies show most people
on Medicaid already work, and many of the rest have some disability, go to
school or are caring for a family member.
Connecting
people with job training is part of a broader effort by some states to improve
Medicaid enrollees’ health beyond paying for doctor and hospital care, said
Hannah Katch, a senior policy analyst with the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, a left-leaning advocacy group. She said states are looking at other
social determinants of health, including housing and food services.
Montana’s
effort has been successful, Katch said, because it surveys people about their
job status and training needs and then uses caseworkers to get them into career
programs. About 60% of Montana Medicaid enrollees surveyed said they are
employed, and 70% expressed interest in learning about opportunities in part-time
or full-time jobs. The top three barriers to employment were poor finances, a
criminal conviction and lack of transportation, according to the surveys.
A study
by the state found its job training program helped lead to a 6% increase in Medicaid
expansion-eligible adults joining the workforce from 2016 to 2018.
Despite
the success of Montana’s voluntary program, conservative lawmakers earlier this
year pushed through legislation requiring that the
state apply to the Trump administration for a waiver to mandate that Medicaid
enrollees find jobs to keep their coverage, as well as pay monthly premiums
based on how long they are on the program.
Health
policy experts in Montana fear the work requirement will unfairly punish people
who fail to report their employment status.
“We are
worried those who are working are going to be subject to some pretty strict
reporting requirements in order to maintain their health coverage,” said
Heather O’Loughlin, co-director of research and development at the Montana
Budget & Policy Center. “We know there will be a loss of coverage, leaving
people in a worse position to take care of themselves.”
Pennsylvania’s
effort to assess enrollees about their job training interest comes after the
governor has twice vetoed legislation to enact work requirements. The
legislature will take up the same bill
this year.
Sen.
David Argall, a Republican co-sponsor of the measure, said the state’s effort
on job training doesn’t go far enough.
“What
they are suggesting is a tiny step in the right direction, but we need to do so
much more,” Argall said.
“Everyone
tells me we have tens of thousands of able-bodied Pennsylvania residents
receiving Medicaid but not working, and we need to be more aggressive in
encouraging them to reenter the workforce,” he said. “We are not asking
Great-Grandma to work in a coal mine. We are talking about guys in their 20s
who need an extra push.”
Phil
Galewitz: pgalewitz@kff.org,
@philgalewitz
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